id author title date pages extension mime words sentence flesch summary cache txt crl-15972 Walters, William H. Journal Prices, Book Acquisitions, and Sustainable College Library Collections 2008-11-01 11 .pdf application/pdf 5732 228 44 For example: • library books in the natural and applied sciences typically circulate just as much as those in other subject areas;16 • the use of electronic books (views or downloads per title) is higher in the sciences than in other fields;17 • engineering and physical science majors check out library books only slightly less o�en than other students;18 • nursing students rely more on books than on journals;19 • in their wri�en coursework, engi- neering students beyond the first year of study cite five times as many books as journal articles;20 • science faculty cite books on a regular basis, and the number of citations per cited book is especially high in the sciences;21 • more than 80 percent of the books acquired by academic health science libraries circulate within the first three years, with an average of 4.6 circulations during that time.22 Circulation data for a typical liberal arts college (table 1) provide further evidence of frequent book use in the sciences. ”2 A major shi� in priorities occurred at most research libraries in the early 1980s, Journal Prices, Book Acquisitions, and Sustainable College Library Collections 577 when aggregate serials expenditures exceeded book expenditures for the first time.3 At undergraduate libraries, the transition occurred later, typically in the mid-1990s.4 By 2000, the primacy of journal collections was well established in most academic libraries. cache/crl-15972.pdf txt/crl-15972.txt